NCAAB Game Recap - UCLA at Arizona
Fri Mar 10, 2017 11:42 PM EST

Mich
74
Purd
70
F(OT)
ECU
77
SMU
81
F
David
73
Dayt
67
F
CoCar
51
UTARL
74
F
UTEP
56
MTSU
82
F
UGA
60
KY
71
F
Gram
57
TXSo
62
F
Ball
70
Akr
74
F
SHSU
63
NOrl
75
F
MD-ES
49
NCC
77
F
Seton
53
Vill
55
F
Duke
93
UNC
83
F
Ida
64
UND
69
F
UtVal
80
CSBak
81
F(4OT)
Cal
65
Oreg
73
F
LongB
57
UCIrv
62
F
Fres
72
Nev
83
F
Marsh
93
LaTec
77
F
GMas
60
VCU
71
F
ULALA
76
GASt
86
F
Ind
60
Wisc
70
F
Tuls
61
Cin
80
F
Vand
72
Fla
62
F(OT)
Kent
68
Ohio
66
F
SFA
69
TXAMC
77
F
How
53
Norf
68
F
South
59
Alc
81
F
KSU
50
WVU
51
F
ND
77
FSU
73
F
Web
80
E WA
72
F
UCLA
75
Ariz
86
F
CS-Ful
64
UCDav
66
F(OT)
UMKC
60
NMSt
78
F
SDSU
63
ColSt
71
F
GrgWas
67
Rich
70
F
Troy
90
GaSo
70
F
NW
72
MD
64
F
Hou
65
UConn
74
F
Miss
72
Ark
73
F
Mem
54
UCF
84
F
StBon
63
URI
74
F
MSU
58
Minn
63
F
ULM
51
TxSt
63
F
Bama
64
SouthCar
53
F
TCU
63
IaSt
84
F
Xav
72
Crei
75
F

Arizona 86, UCLA 75

Mar 10, 2017, 11:42 PM EST

Final

1

2

T

(3) UCLA

35

40

75

(2) Arizona

41

45

86

No. 7 Arizona beats No. 3 UCLA 86-75 in Pac-12 semifinals
Sat Mar 11, 2017 3:15 AM

LAS VEGAS (AP) A spot in the championship game secure, Arizona coach Sean Miller called a timeout with 0.9 seconds left against UCLA, threw the ball onto the floor and began shouting in the face of Kadeem Allen.

Miller said it was to give the senior guard his due and make sure his team was poised at the end the game. His actions showed there might have been a little more to it following a celebration by the Bruins two weeks ago in Tucson.

Lauri Markkanen scored 29 points, Allonzo Trier added 20 and No. 7 Arizona shot its way to an emotional 86-75 win over No. 3 UCLA on Friday night in the Pac-12 Tournament semifinals.

"We learned from UCLA in that game, making sure your team is poised when they called that timeout," Miller said. "We wanted to do the same thing, make sure our team was poised moving forward."

UCLA lost to Arizona at home early in the season and returned the favor at McKale Center with a 77-72 victory on Feb. 25. Coach Steve Alford called a timeout with a second left in that game and it apparently riled up the Wildcats, who were hoping for a rematch after advancing to the tournament semifinals.

Arizona (29-4) made the most of it, advancing to Saturday's title game against No. 5 Oregon. The co-Pac-12 champion Wildcats shot 50 percent and made 10 of 20 from 3-point range in front of a rowdy crowd that made T-Mobile Arena feel like McKale Center west.

"I guess they were upset when I called timeout at their place," Alford said. "We made two free throws and I didn't mean disrespect at all. It put us up five and I wanted to set my defense. We hadn't won there, so I didn't want anything goofy to happen. Apparently he thought we were being disrespectful and that was his way of getting back at us."

UCLA (29-4) won the game in Tucson by outscoring the Wildcats 20-4 on second-chance points. Arizona shored up its rebounding issues and hounded the Bruins into one miss after another.

UCLA shot 4 of 25 from 3-point range, with Lonzo Ball and Bryce Alford combining for 13 points on 2-for-16 shooting from beyond the arc.

Isaac Hamilton led UCLA with 20 points and TJ Leaf had 15 before fouling out.

"We didn't shoot the ball well," Alford said. "We missed a lot of open looks that we normally make."

The Bruins and Wildcats played two entertaining games during the regular season, each winning on the road.

The first half of the rubber match between Pac-12 powers was an entertaining mix of athletic plays, superb defensive stretches, followed by runs of fantastic offense.

Arizona had the last burst, taking a 41-35 lead into halftime after making 7 of 13 from 3-point range while the Bruins went 2 for 12.

Ball struggled with foul trouble in the quarterfinals against USC and wasn't much of a factor in the first half, with as many turnovers (four) as points and assists combined.

Arizona continued to hit shots as UCLA continued to clank, stretching the lead to 63-48 as the decibel level in T-Mobile Arena continued to rise.

The Bruins tried to make runs , but couldn't get shots to consistently fall to make up enough ground, allowing the Wildcats to get a little payback.

"Never been prouder of a group of kids," Miller said. "We lost a tough game at home in our last game and I think it really stuck with these guys and motivated them to be better. We had the opportunity and we took advantage of it."

BIG PICTURE

Arizona can look unstoppable when it's making perimeter shots and playing defense, which it did against UCLA.

The Bruins had been playing solid defense recently, but struggled to stop the Wildcats and couldn't outscore them.

MARKKANEN ON THE MARK

Markkanen went through a shooting slump in February, but has found his stroke in Las Vegas.

The Finnish 7-footer went 4 for 10 from 3-point range against UCLA and is 8 of 17 in two games of the tournament.

UP NEXT

Arizona faces top-seeded Oregon in Saturday night's title game.

UCLA should still get a high NCAA Tournament seed.

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More AP college basketball: www.collegebasketball.ap.org and https://twitter.com/AP-Top25

Leaders

UCLA PTS +/- AST REB ST BLK
I. Hamilton 20 0 1 4 1 1
T. Leaf 15 0 3 8 0 1
Arizona PTS +/- AST REB ST BLK
L. Markkanen 29 0 1 6 1 1
A. Trier 20 0 4 4 1 0

Team Comparison

UCLA Ariz
Points For 75 86
Field Goals 24/59-41% 28/56-50%
Three Pointers 4/25-16% 10/20-50%
Free Throws 23/26-88% 20/32-62%
Offensive Rebounds 7 12
Defensive Rebounds 25 26
Rebounds 32 43
Blocks 5 2
Steals 3 9
Turnovers 14 14
Personal Fouls 23 20
Technical Fouls 0 0
Ejections 0 0

2016-17 Reg Season - Ariz Leads Series 2-1

Date Result Away Pts Ldr Home Pts Ldr
Sat Jan 21 Ariz 96 @ UCLA 85 K. Simmons 20 L. Ball 24
Sat Feb 25 UCLA 77 @ Ariz 72 B. Alford 15 A. Trier 28
Fri Mar 10 UCLA 75 @ Ariz 86 I. Hamilton 20 L. Markkanen 29

Game Information

Stadium: T-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, Nevada
Attendance: 19,224
Game Time: